Heath Ledger's Dead

Yeah, I heard about his death on tv last night. Very sad news. I feel bad for his young daughter, and Michelle.
 
I know a few people who ride with them - and they do not want to sink to the level of Fred's group... They will show up at a funeral - and basically stand at attention, often times with their backs to the funeral so as to not intrude on the family's private moment, and stand guard.. they are not there to incite trouble but to shield the family from the low life that is Fred Phelps and his ilk..

It' says it quite clearly on the PGR's mission statement

Yeah i figured the motorcycle group wouldn't do it...but it's got to have enraged a few of the family members. I heard that someone beat one of Fred Phelp's group with their own sign - later he died from a heart attack :-S
 
HEATH Ledger's body was still warm when paramedics were called to his New York apartment.

"Torso is warm," reads a 3.28pm log entry from the Emergency Medical Service dispatch report.

A warm body, said a veteran Manhattan paramedic, "means he wasn't dead for long".

The revelation makes even more heart-breaking the fact that nine potentially critical minutes were wasted when Ledger's masseuse, Diane Lee Wolozin, made three calls to actor Mary-Kate Olsen before she called 911 last Tuesday.

The revelation came as Ledger's family and loved ones held a private memorial service at a chapel in Los Angeles.

The service took place after hours and under heavy security at the Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park and Mortuary to thwart paparazzi and religious extremists.

Religious groups vowed to picket the memorial because of Ledger's performance as a gay cowboy in Brokeback Mountain.

Security guards manned the front gates and LA police checked the grounds to ensure Ledger's parents, Kim and Sally, his sister Kate, ex-fiancee Michelle Williams, his two-year-old daughter Matilda, former girlfriend Naomi Watts and 10 other close family and friends could mourn in private.

Ledger, 28, died last Tuesday in his Manhattan apartment from a suspected accidental overdose of sleeping pills.

After the 30-minute service, the group moved on to the Beverly Hills Hotel for an intimate dinner in a private room.

"Even though it was a sad occasion, everyone was smiling, hugging each other and holding hands," an insider said.

"It was a really positive group."

Hollywood's elite mourned Ledger at the Screen Actors Guild Awards at LA's Shrine Auditorium.

Religious protesters gathered across the street from the auditorium, toting signs that read "Heath's in Hell".

British actor Daniel Day-Lewis, who dedicated his SAG best actor award to Ledger, said he greatly admired the Australian actor.

"I thought he was beautiful. I just had a very strong feeling I would have liked him very much as a man," Day-Lewis said.

"I admired him very much.

"I'm absolutely certain he would have done many wonderful things in his life.

"We should leave him alone and we should leave his family alone to suffer their unimaginable grief in private."

The New York emergency dispatch report showed that when Ms Wolozin finally called 911, she reported that someone had "passed out".

The log entry goes on to specify it was a "mle, 30 . . . in bed not breathing, not waking up (sic)".

Ms Wolozin also told dispatchers that Ledger was "stiff -- head, hands, feet cold", before declaring his torso was still warm.

New York police said they were not planning to question Olsen, despite speculation she sent her security guards to Ledger's flat, possibly to clean away drug gear before police arrived.

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said investigators were satisfied they had "all the info needed from witnesses who were on-scene -- that's the cleaning woman, the masseuse".

The cause of death will not be known for at least several more days, after medical examiners complete toxicology tests.

Ledger's family, Williams and other close friends are expected to fly back to Australia for a funeral expected to be held later this week in Perth -- Ledger's hometown.

This story gets more and more bizarre...
 
TMZ, the celebrity website that broke the news of the actor's death last Tuesday, quoted sources "intimately connected with the investigation" saying that the 28-year-old may have died from a heart attack.

"It's now appearing that the level of toxicity (from medication) in Ledger's system was low enough that it may not have caused his death. These sources say Heath's heart stopped," the website reported.

Initial tests on the body of the star of Brokeback Mountain proved inconclusive, but Ledger's family has insisted that he would not have taken his own life.

In an article published yesterday, Sarah Lyall, who conducted the last interview with the actor in November, said Ledger "did not seem depressed, or suicidal or whacked out from drugs" when they met.

"What he seemed was exhausted," Lyall told the Observer. "It looked to me like the sort of fatigue you get not from being tired of life, but from being too full of it - too full of plans, too full of self-analysis, too full of noisy thoughts that won't stay quiet."

The actress Naomi Watts, Ledger's former girlfriend, was reported to have visited the Los Angeles mortuary where his body was being kept. She was also said to have joined Ledger's family and friends in a private memorial ceremony.

His body was expected to be flown to Australia today, where it was thought that a funeral would be held in Perth, his home city.

On Saturday evening a moving tribute by Ledger's father, Kim, in which he remembered his son riding a skateboard through the streets of New York, was read out during an Australian ball at the city's Waldorf Astoria hotel.

"Heath did not become an actor for the fame or fortune," Mr Ledger wrote of his son.

"He loved his craft and he loved helping his friends. He loved chess and skateboarding too. My image of Heath in New York is him with his skateboard, a canvas bag and his beanie. "

"That was Heath to me."

An iconic photo of Ledger, smiling and leaning back in a cowboy hat in Brokeback Mountain, was projected onto a screen as Australia's consul-general to the US, John Olsen, read out the tribute.


Sources claim that the level of drugs in Heath Ledger's system was too low to cause his death

"Heath is, and always will be, an Australian," wrote Mr Ledger, who flew to America to escort his son's body back to Perth. "He adored his home. His last two weeks with us over Christmas in Perth were just bliss."

Earlier Daniel Day-Lewis, the British actor, interrupted Oprah Winfrey on her celebrity talk show to pay tribute to Ledger.

Fighting back tears, the 50-year-old Oscar hopeful said he had "marvelled" at Ledger's work. At the Sundance Film Festival in Utah, Robert Redford, the veteran actor, talked about the impact of Ledger's death, comparing it to the shock caused by the 1981 assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan.

"That's too young to check out. It was a shock," Redford said.

He described Ledger as "one of those actors who was very, very special because he played so many different kinds of roles".

Last night Day-Lewis also dedicated his Screen Actors Guild Award for his performance in "There Will Be Blood" to Ledger.

"In Brokeback Mountain he was unique, he was perfect," Day-Lewis said. "That scene in the trailer at the end of the film is as moving as anything I think I've ever seen."

Backstage, Day-Lewis said he never met Ledger but the actor's death was all he had been thinking about recently.

"I thought he was beautiful. I just had a very strong feeling I would have liked him very much as a man," he said. "I admired him very much. I'm absolutely certain he would have done many wonderful things in his life."

you'd think an autopsy would prove conclusively whether or not he had a heart attack...
 
http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/02/06/heath.ledger/index.htm
Ledger's death caused by accidental overdose
Story Highlights
Medical examiner's office: "Manner of death is accident"

"Brokeback Mountain" star, 28, died January 22 in a New York apartment

The 2005 film won Ledger an Oscar nomination for best actor

Colleagues say actor had been suffering respiratory ailment

(CNN) -- Heath Ledger died from an accidental overdose of prescription medications including painkillers, anti-anxiety drugs and sleeping pills, the New York City medical examiner's office said Tuesday.

"Mr. Heath Ledger died as the result of acute intoxication by the combined effects of oxycodone, hydrocodone, diazepam, temazepam, alprazolam, and doxylamine," the office said in a short statement.

"We have concluded that the manner of death is accident, resulting from the abuse of prescription medications."

Hydrocodone and oxycodone are painkillers. Diazepam is an anti-anxiety drug commonly sold under the brand name Valium; alprazolam is also an anti-anxiety drug, sold under such names as Xanax. Temazepam, sold under such names as Restoril and Euhypnos, is a sleeping agent, as is doxylamine.

Ledger died January 22 at an apartment in Lower Manhattan. The Oscar-nominated Australian actor, best known for his role as a stoic, closeted cowboy in the 2005 film "Brokeback Mountain," was 28.

An autopsy done on the actor January 23 was inconclusive.

In a statement released through Ledger's publicist, Ledger's father, Kim, said Wednesday: "While no medications were taken in excess, we learned today the combination of doctor-prescribed drugs proved lethal for our boy. Heath's accidental death serves as a caution to the hidden dangers of combining prescription medication, even at low dosage."

"Families rarely experience the uplifting, warm and massive outpouring of grief and support as have we, from every corner of the planet," his family added in the statement. "This has deeply and profoundly touched our hearts and lives. We are eternally grateful."

Ledger's family returned to Perth, Australia, Tuesday for the actor's funeral, according to The Associated Press. Arrangements were private.

Ledger had talked about his difficulty sleeping after back-to-back roles as a Bob Dylan persona in "I'm Not There" and the Joker in "The Dark Knight," the latter of which is due out this summer.

"Last week I probably slept an average of two hours a night," Ledger told The New York Times in November. "I couldn't stop thinking. My body was exhausted, and my mind was still going."

In the hours leading up to Ledger's death two weeks ago, a housekeeper, identified as Teresa Solomon, arrived at the apartment about 12:30 p.m., a police source with knowledge of the investigation said.

She saw Ledger lying on a bed face down with a sheet pulled up around his shoulders and heard him snoring, the source said.

Masseuse Diana Wolozin arrived at the apartment about 2:45 p.m. to give Ledger a massage, according to the police source. About 15 minutes later, when he had not come out of the bedroom and the door remained closed, she went in, saw him lying in bed and set up a massage table.

She shook Ledger, but he did not respond, so she used his cell phone to call actress Mary-Kate Olsen, a friend of Ledger's, in California, the source said.

Wolozin told Olsen that Ledger was unconscious, according to the police source.

Olsen reportedly told her that she would call private security people in New York.

At 3:26 p.m., Wolozin called 911 and told authorities Ledger was not breathing. While on the phone with dispatchers, Wolozin tried to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation on Ledger, but he was unresponsive.

Emergency personnel arrived seven minutes later, according to the police source, at about the same time as a private security person summoned by Olsen.

The medical technicians performed CPR on Ledger and used a cardiac defibrillator, but their efforts were in vain and he was pronounced dead at 3:36 p.m. By then, two other private security people summoned by Olsen had arrived as well as police.

His former fiancée, actress Michelle Williams, has asked the public to respect the need for her, the couple's 2-year-old daughter, Matilda, and others "to grieve privately."

"My heart is broken," Williams said in a statement issued last week via her publicist. "I am the mother of the most tender-hearted, high-spirited, beautiful little girl who is the spitting image of her father. All that I can cling to is his presence inside her that reveals itself every day. His family and I watch Matilda as she whispers to trees, hugs animals, and takes steps two at a time, and we know that he is with us still. She will be brought up in the best memories of him."

Condolences poured in from Ledger's friends and co-stars.

"He was a wonderful guy, he was a wonderful actor, he had a wonderful future ahead of him, and I liked him," said actor Eric Roberts, who worked with Ledger in "The Dark Knight," the latest installment in the "Batman" series set to open in July.

Colleagues on Terry Gilliam's film "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus," which Ledger had been shooting in England, said the actor apparently had been suffering from a respiratory ailment in the days before he died.

Christopher Plummer told Entertainment Weekly that Ledger had a "terrible, lingering bug in London, and he couldn't sleep at all. We all -- I thought he'd probably got walking pneumonia."

Ledger's first American film was the teen comedy "10 Things I Hate About You" in 1999. He passed up several scripts before taking a role in the Revolutionary War drama "The Patriot" in 2000 and "A Knight's Tale" in 2001. He also played a supporting role in "Monster's Ball."

But Ledger was perhaps best known for his portrayal of Ennis Del Mar in "Brokeback Mountain," Ang Lee's film about two cowboys who had a secret romantic relationship. The role earned Ledger a best actor Oscar nomination.

Deadly cocktail
Here are the drugs found in Heath Ledger's body:

• Oxycodone -- narcotic/pain killer; trade names: OxyContin, Percodan
• Hydrocodone -- narcotic/pain killer; trade name (combined with acetaminophen): Vicodin
• Diazepam -- anti-anxiety drug; trade name: Valium
• Alprazolam -- anti-anxiety drug; trade name: Xanax
• Doxylamine -- sleep medication; trade name: Unisom
• Temazepam -- sleep medication; trade name: Restoril


"We have concluded that the manner of death is accident, resulting from the abuse of prescription medications."
And yet it's an accident...
 
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